Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Maine Question 5, 2016

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Yes
  
388,273

Invalid or blank votes
  
26,814

Valid votes
  
744,894

Date
  
8 November 2016

Maine Question 5, 2016

388,273
  
7001521200000000000♠52.12%

356,621
  
7001478800000000000♠47.88%

744,894
  
7001965300000000000♠96.53%

Maine Question 5, formally An Act to Establish Ranked-Choice Voting, is a citizen-initiated referendum question that qualified for the Maine November 8, 2016 statewide ballot and was approved by a margin of 52% to 48%. It has changed how most Maine elections will be conducted from a plurality voting system to a ranked choice voting system (also known as instant runoff voting). It appeared on the ballot along with elections for President of the United States, Maine's two U.S. House seats, the Legislature, five other ballot questions, and various local elections. Maine will be the first state to use such a system for its statewide elections for governor and U.S. Senate.

Contents

Background

In the 11 Maine gubernatorial elections prior to 2016, only incumbent Governors Joe Brennan in 1982 and Angus King in 1998 won more than 50% of the vote. Typically gubernatorial elections have more than two candidates; the 2010 election had five candidates, with Paul LePage emerging as the winner with 37.6% of the vote. Some public opinion felt that his victory was due to opponents of LePage dividing their votes between Democratic candidate Libby Mitchell and independent candidate Eliot Cutler.

Proposals to enact ranked choice voting have been introduced in the Legislature as early as 2003, but were rejected., After a 2010 charter change, the city of Portland began electing its mayor using ranked choice voting in 2011. There were new legislative proposals in 2011, though they were rejected as well. In 2014, upon releasing his supporters to vote for someone else in the 2014 election, Eliot Cutler encouraged his supporters to support ranked choice voting. Led by former independent State Senator Dick Woodbury, Ranked Choice Voting collected more than the 61,123 valid signatures necessary to put a proposal to voters, collecting some 40,000 on Election Day 2014. The group collected 75,369 signatures and delivered them to Maine Secretary of State Matthew Dunlap by October 19, 2015. Dunlap ultimately certified 64,687 signatures by November 18, 2015, which put the proposal on the November 2016 ballot.

Per the Maine Constitution, the proposal went to the Legislature in its 2016 session, but it did not act on the measure.On January 20, 2016, the Maine House of Representatives voted to place the proposal on the ballot without holding a public hearing, over the objections of Republicans, led by Rep. Heather Sirocki, expressing concern about the constitutionality of the proposal. Secretary of State Dunlap released the final wording of the question on June 23 as it will appear on the ballot: "Do you want to allow voters to rank their choices of candidates in elections for U.S. Senate, Congress, Governor, State Senate, and State Representative, and to have ballots counted at the state level in multiple rounds in which last-place candidates are eliminated until a candidate wins by majority?"

Constitutionality

Some, including a Deputy Secretary of State and a state legislator, have expressed concern about the constitutionality of the proposal. Deputy Secretary of State Julie Flynn has said that the Maine Constitution requires that the Governor and state legislators be elected with a plurality of votes and that a system based on ranked choice voting could be challenged in court. Flynn also expressed concern that the proposal inserts the Secretary of State into the process, while the Constitution states that votes shall be tabulated by municipal officials. Maine Attorney General Janet Mills has issued an opinion at the request of Maine Senate President Michael Thibodeau stating that while the referendum must appear on the ballot, it will likely require amending the Maine Constitution to implement it, in order to satisfy the concerns given by the Secretary of State's office. She added that the manner in which the proposal addresses how a tie in the voting should be addressed, drawing lots, directly conflicts with Article V of the Maine Constitution, which states that a tie in the vote for Governor would be settled by the Maine Legislature meeting in joint session to choose a winner.

The Committee for Ranked Choice Voting Maine dismisses such concerns, noting that a majority vote is always a plurality vote and that such a system has survived legal challenges in several other states. Its website statement also links to statements by several Maine law professors supporting its arguments.

Campaign

Supporters of the proposal, led by Ranked Choice Voting Maine, contend that it will lead to people voting for the candidate that they support and end strategic voting to vote merely for the candidate that they think will win, and that the ranked choice system will result in a candidate that has some level of support from a majority of voters. They further contend that ranked choice voting will result in less negative campaigning, as candidates will need to appeal to a broad coalition of voters beyond their base of supporters to gain support as a second or third choice, if needed. If approved, it would make Maine the first state to use ranked choice voting for its statewide elections.

Opponents

  • Bill Diamond, Democratic State Senator, former Secretary of State of Maine
  • Paul LePage, Governor of Maine
  • Heather Sirocki, State Representative (R-Scarborough).
  • Ellsworth American
  • Bangor Daily News
  • References

    Maine Question 5, 2016 Wikipedia